What's the best medium for delivering eye-popping return on investment? Strangely enough, it may be radio, at least in a study of 10 brands from last year.

Despite a recent flood of studies and marketer statements validating returns from Facebook and other digital media, radio beats most of those glowing digital ROI numbers in a study of 10 brands that advertised on Clear Channel stations. The study is from Nielsen Catalina Solutions, which combined data from Nielsen's newly acquired radio-audience measurement business with shopper-card data from Catalina.

Brands averaged a sales lift of more than $6 for every $1 spent on radio ads – an ROI double that of even the best results from many recent studies of digital or TV media, including one from France and Coca-Cola that Facebook recently touted. One retail brand delivered an almost unheard of $23.21 in sales lift for every $1 invested, though a soft drink brand at the low end of the range delivered a more pedestrian $1.38.

The study was presented at the Advertising Research Foundation's Re:Think 2014 conference in New York on Monday. Though it was sponsored by Clear Channel, "We didn't touch the data," said Radha Subramanyam, exec VP-insights, research and analytics of Clear Channel Media & Entertainment, which sponsored the research. "We let [Nielsen Catalina] do all the analysis."

The Nielsen Catalina analysis doesn't need big budgets to measure results, since it can glean ad exposure and purchases directly from households – a total of 14,000 in this case that had both their radio listening tracked with Portable People Meters and their retail purchases tracked by Catalina.

In one case, a snack food brand spent $1.5 million on radio to generate $10.8 million in added sales, a $7.18

In several cases, radio had a particularly strong effect on African-American and Hispanic consumers, Ms. Wood said. ROI, but only 9% of category sales came from buyers who were exposed to the campaign, said Leslie Wood, chief research officer of Nielsen Catalina. Where radio had its biggest impact – retailer ads – it came because the people affected by the ads made multiple product purchases at the retailers.

"It's hard to take our averages and call it a norm," Ms. Wood said, and the question remains whether marketers would get similar results at higher spending levels or across more brands and categories. Still, she said, "These numbers are extremely high."

Ms. Subramanyam, who has worked in TV and digital media previously, said, "I have never seen such consistent delivery against advertising metrics and this kind of massive return on investment."

Part of the high ROI probably relates to radio's relatively low pricing, she acknowledged.

Ms. Wood said she was particularly surprised by the strong showing, though, because low-budget radio ads don't get as much creative pre-testing as TV. She believes one reason may be people's affinity with their radio stations, something media buyers in New York may have trouble believing.

"If you live in New York, you probably don't drive, so you may never listen to the radio," she said. "But the rest of the United States does. And it's shocking how connected people are to their radio."

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